In:Phonological Variation in French: Illustrations from three continents
Edited by Randall Gess, Chantal Lyche and Trudel Meisenburg
[Studies in Language Variation 11] 2012
► pp. v–vii
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Published online: 6 December 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/silv.11.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/silv.11.toc
Table of contents
Chapter 1. Introduction to phonological variation in French: Illustrations from three continents
Part I. Africa
Chapter 2. A phonological study of French spoken by multilingual speakers from Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic
Chapter 3. French in Senegal after three centuries: A phonological study of Wolof speakers’ French
Chapter 4. The phonological characteristics of French in Bamako, Mali: A sociolinguistic approach
Part II. Europe
Chapter 5. An overview of the phonological and phonetic properties of Southern French: Data from two Marseille surveys
Chapter 6.The variation of pronunciation in Belgian French: From segmental phonology to prosody
Chapter 7. A study of young Parisian speech: Some trends in pronunciation
Chapter 8. A phonological study of a Swiss French variety: Data from the canton of Neuchâtel
Part III. North America
Chapter 9. An overview of the phonetics and phonology of Acadian French spoken in northeastern New Brunswick (Canada)
Chapter 10. Laurentian French (Quebec): Extra vowels, missing schwas and surprising liaison consonants
Chapter 11. “Cajun” French in a non-Acadian community: A phonological study of the French of Ville Platte, Louisiana
Chapter 12. Laurentian French phonology in a majority setting outside Québec: Observations from the PFC Hearst Ontario Study
Chapter 13. Albertan French phonology: French in an anglophone context
Chapter 14. Phonological variation in French: Unity and diversity across continents
Varieties and geographical names
Subjects and key notions
